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Starter DAW GarageBand -> Full DAW Logic for iOS

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Comments

  • I grew up as a musician decades before there was anything resembling a PC DAW. I've only been using them for less than 10 years. What was it like in the mid to late '90s? I had an Amiga and was messing around with Dr. T's MIDI sequencer. I had to learn to use a PC with Windows 3.1 (later Win95) when the WWW was just getting off the ground. For a variety of reasons, I ignored what was going on with computers and music for about a decade or so until I bought a Mac and Logic Pro 9. My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

  • edited November 2017

    @lovadamusic said:
    I grew up as a musician decades before there was anything resembling a PC DAW. I've only been using them for less than 10 years. What was it like in the mid to late '90s? I had an Amiga and was messing around with Dr. T's MIDI sequencer. I had to learn to use a PC with Windows 3.1 (later Win95) when the WWW was just getting off the ground. For a variety of reasons, I ignored what was going on with computers and music for about a decade or so until I bought a Mac and Logic Pro 9. My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

    Mostly agreed..though I believe there were a few more MIDI editing functions back then

  • edited November 2017

    @lovadamusic said:
    My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

    In those days (~1997) I was using a Windows 3.11 version of Cakewalk Pro. MIDI only, no audio. I used it to drive the synth in the Soundblaster AWE32 soundcard in my PC and a bunch of external MIDI synths, including a crunchy old Juno 106. Garageband is lightyears beyond what was available to us at a typical budget 20 years ago. So far beyond in fact, that millennials will have difficulty even imagining the limitations we had to (and could easily) work with :D

  • @realdavidai said:

    @lovadamusic said:
    I grew up as a musician decades before there was anything resembling a PC DAW. I've only been using them for less than 10 years. What was it like in the mid to late '90s? I had an Amiga and was messing around with Dr. T's MIDI sequencer. I had to learn to use a PC with Windows 3.1 (later Win95) when the WWW was just getting off the ground. For a variety of reasons, I ignored what was going on with computers and music for about a decade or so until I bought a Mac and Logic Pro 9. My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

    Mostly agreed..though I believe there were a few more MIDI editing functions back then

    True that MIDI editing in GB is far less than state-of-the-art. I think this is one area where it could easily improve. No need for Logic on iOS just to get more robust MIDI editing.

  • @brambos said:

    @lovadamusic said:
    My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

    In those days (~1997) I was using a Windows 3.11 version of Cakewalk Pro. MIDI only, no audio. I used it to drive the synth in the Soundblaster AWE32 soundcard in my PC and a bunch of external MIDI synths, including a crunchy old Juno 106. Garageband is lightyears beyond what was available to us at a typical budget 20 years ago. So far beyond in fact, that millennials will have difficulty even imagining the limitations we had to (and could easily) work with :D

    The details of those early days of personal computing is fading in my memory, but you're so right. The bleeding edge of technology at the time could be frustrating but, at the same time, it was fantastic new opportunity. What we have today (and for the price) is mind-boggling, far more than I ever imagined. With the experience of history comes appreciation.

  • I thought in 2017 we already live in a future like in the 5th element or so.
    I wonder always whats so special about tech of today. I think they sell us the same things which exist like decades just in a new look. Mankind is simple :#

  • @lovadamusic said:
    I grew up as a musician decades before there was anything resembling a PC DAW. I've only been using them for less than 10 years. What was it like in the mid to late '90s? I had an Amiga and was messing around with Dr. T's MIDI sequencer. I had to learn to use a PC with Windows 3.1 (later Win95) when the WWW was just getting off the ground. For a variety of reasons, I ignored what was going on with computers and music for about a decade or so until I bought a Mac and Logic Pro 9. My impression is that today's GarageBand on iOS is far beyond anything available on desktops 20 years ago. Is that true?

    No, GarageBand is quite primitive compared to 20 year old Logic Audio 3 especially when it comes to audio and MIDI editing. Emagic Logic Audio also had the Enviroment. Before Apple bought the company Emagic, there was Logic Audio for Windows and Mac. I also made music for decades before a Windows/Mac setup. My first setup in 1979 was a ARP Odyssey, ARP Axxe and ARP Sequencer. Picked up a Tascam 4 track. Used various hardware drum machines and sequencers till we got an Apple lle running the MIDI program Passport. Later used my Roland W-30 8 track MIDI sequencer then picked up my first Windows PC and Logic Audio 3 I believe around 1995.

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